This book is as good as a book written by a 15-year old has any right to be, which is...not great. I ran across this book because it was in a stack of books my library was going to discard because it hadn't been checked out in over three years, and after I read it I put it back on the stack to still get discarded.
The book had an honesty about it that comes from the author having essentially the same perspective as the characters, but that perspective was sometimes disorganized and focused on things that didn't add up to being as compelling as it could have been. The quote on the back cover that is used in the book is that the best friend "saves the world," but there's no world saving here. She drives her to one doctor appointment, and she calls her aunt to have her get the friend one day at a modeling agency with another character you aren't even supposed to like until the last third of the story. The arc of the book doesn't even center around the actual impact that being pregnant has on a teenager's life. The conflict around Melissa's pregnancy is about working up the nerve to tell her parents. I get how this could seem like a big deal in the world of a 14-year old, but high drama it is not, especially when all of the fallout where the actual life changes come in get summarized in the last 2 pages.
Jaime, the narrator, also has a separate story line about her becoming more assertive and less of a "doormat." This seems to be accomplished by being the lead in the play, calling her estranged father, and getting a boyfriend (not necessarily in that order). However, the set up of her being a doormat is just told to us over and over without much in the way of demonstrating any effect this had on her life before so the transformation doesn't seem to have much impact.
I checked up on the author to see if she had written the second novel touted in her biographical blurb, and the answer is no. There is no further work from this author that has been published. I subsequently discovered that she is the daughter of a novelist, which explains a lot. If this manuscript had gone into a slush pile it would have never seen the light of day, but handed directly to an agent/editor as a favor for their award-winning client (the author's mother), there's just enough honesty and novelty to see if it can scoot by on its charm. I can see how the right person could connect with the themes of this story, but it wouldn't be too difficult to find better books on the same topics.